Man is it a good time to be a comic fan. There are so many
great titles — and so many great re-releases of classic titles — that we have
an embarrassment of riches when it comes to our friends and loved ones shopping
for us. So do yourself a favor and make their job easier by sending them this
comic and graphic novel gift guide; they'll thank you for it (and then you can
thank us later).

The Sandman Omnibus

So the first issue of The Sandman Overture is out, but you' dfeel
bad about getting your friend a single comic for Christmas. So why not go all
the way in the other direction, and spend $100 and
buy them the first volume of The Sandman Omnibus, which contains over 1,000
pages of Neil Gaiman's Vertigo opus, styled in a beautiful classic hardcover
look.

If you know someone dying for Episode VII, you might want to
sate their needs with Dark Horse's excellent new Star Wars comic series. Set
in-between A New Hope and Empire Strikes Back, the comic focuses on Princess
Leia as she leads an elite X-Wing squadron to ferret out a spy in the
Rebellion. The
paperback is $15 here.

Allie Brosh's artwork may look deceptively simple, but her
comics are anything but. She is gut-bustingly hilarious, especially when she talks
about her ridiculous dogs, but also insightful and phenomenally articulate; her
treatise on what it feels like to suffer from depression remains, in all
honesty, one of the best things ever produced on the internet (and it's still
somehow massively entertaining, too). Get this for the smart people who
appreciate humor in your life, and they won't be disappointed. The
book is a mere $10 in paperback.

Despite the hit movie, it can hard figuring out where to
start with the actual Avengers comics. But wonder no more, as Warren Ellis'
stand-alone graphic novel is the perfect place for new readers and old fans
alike. Using the team from the movie, along with Wolverine and Captain Marvel, Endless
Wartime is a quintessential Avengers tale that's just as deep as it is
action-packed and entertaining. It's
available here for $16.

Some people enjoy comics, but they don't enjoy superhero
comics (trust me, they're out there). If you're not up on all the latest indie
releases, you can't find a safer — or better —­ gift that The Best American
Comics 2013. Edited by Bone's Jeff Smith, it contains dozens of comics and
samples of comics, from both print and web. I guarantee you the percipient will
find at least one new comic he/she will instantly love, if not more. Buy
it here for $17.

If you're at all worried that the comic based on the hit cartoon Adventure Time would just be a cheap cash-in, don't. This comic gets the bizarre sensibilities
of the show perfectly, and it uses the medium to tell stories in ways only
comics can. The first two volumes of the hardcover Mathematical Editions —
which contain a multitude of extras — are
out now for $25-30 each.

Writer Scott Snyder has been cranking out awesome Batman
stories since the New 52 debuted, and none better than The Court of Owls, in
which a secret Gotham City society rises up to destroy all the city's leaders
and protectors — including Batman and his allies. Greg Capullo's art is a
perfect match for the Dark Knight, too. This
$17 special edition comes with a super-creepy Court of Owls mask, so hey,
bonus.

Terry Moore's acclaimed Strangers in Paradise remains one of
the best, most beloved comics ever created, and now you can help spread the
good word with this wonderfully affordable softcover omnibus of the entire
series. It contains two volumes of all 2000+ pages of the epic love story, with
all the complications life tends to throw in the way,
for a mere $67.

Jonathan Hickman's apocalyptic scifi Western was an instant
hit when it was released earlier this year, and it's easy to see why — the
post-apocalyptic world he created is brutal but rich, and making the Four
Horseman of the Apocalypse heroes trying to assassinate the U.S. president is a
pretty bold idea. There's a reason the comic sells put almost instantly, and
you owe it to your scifi loving friends to give them the opportunity to check
it out. The
first volume is $9 at Amazon.

Congressman George Lewis brings this incredible true tale
his role in the civil rights movement in general and the 1963 March on
Washington in specific in this remarkable graphic novel with co-creators co-writer
Andrew Aydin and New York Times best-selling artist Nate Powell. It begins with
Lewis' upbringing in rural Alabama, to his meeting with Martin Luther King Jr.,
to a decisive sit-in at Nashville's City Hall. March is easily one of the best
comics of the year, and is available in
hardcover for $25 and paperback for $10.

Continue the story of Game of Thrones will this graphic
novel interpretation of George R.R. Martin's side-stories about a young knight
named Dunk and his mysterious squire Egg. Set 100 years before the A Song of Ice and Fire books start, this is the most new Game of Thrones you can buy someone before
the TV show finally returns in March. It's
only $9 here.

The hit manga that's taken Japan by storm arrived in the
U.S. earlier this year, and it's worth every bit of the hype. In the near
future, humanity has been decimates by brutal, unthinking giants who kill (and
usually eat) every human they see. The humans all live in one huge city
protected by a massive wall — but when a titan somehow finds his way inside, no
one is safe. Each
volume of the manga is only $6-9, and the first nine volumes are already
available.

A comic based on a videogame — and a fighting game made by
the Mortal Kombat guys at that — sounds potentially terrible, but somehow writer Tom Taylor
has created one of the most fascinating DC comics of the year. When the Joker
tricks Superman into killing Lois Lane, the bereaved superman kills the villain
— thus setting off a series of events that will divide the Justice League and
possibly destroy the world. The
hardcover is a steal at $12.

The two hit franchises finally collide, thanks to IDW! When
the Cybermen team up with the Borg, the Enterprise crew must team up with the
Doctor and his companions to safe the universe — and there's not quite like
seeing Matt Smith and Patrick Stewart "acting" opposite each other, even in
comic book form. It's
available for $25 here.

It's always weird to say that Hawkeye is the best superhero
in comics right now, even though he doesn't have any superpowers. But as Matt
Fraction's mind-blowingly good run on the Avengers' resident archer has proven,
Hawkeye doesn't need superpowers, bec he can get himself out of trouble (and
more often into trouble) by himself. Readin about Hawkeye's downtime, whether
it be pissing off Russian mobsters, pissing off all his ex's, or even just
trying to set up his home theater is about twice as good as any other superhero
comic you'll read this year. The
first two volumes are available for $10-13.

It's difficult to state how fantastic Boxers & Saints is, because the Chinese Boxer Rebellion doesn't sound like the best subject for a young adult comic. But Gene Luen Yang's masterpiece never gets bogged down with history, instead focusing on two characters, Little Bao and Vibiana — Little Bao rises against the Western missionaries abusing his hometown, but Vibiana finds a home among those missionaries and must decide whether to abandon her country or her faith. Boxers & Saints offers no easy answers, but the book is a pleasure to read for audiences of all ages. The two-part boxed set in currently $25.

Scifi's greatest new franchise comes to comics thank to Dark
Horse, and this is the set fans need. It contains all
four Mass Effect series — Redemption, Evolution, Invasion, and Homeworlds — as
well as the various short stories and specials that have been released. It also
comes with running commentary from the comic writers and artists, too. Anyone
who enjoys the Mass Effect games will enjoy these comics, and amny people who
simply love good scifi will, too. The book is $40
here.

Saga

You've heard all the hype, but it's true — Brian Vaughan's Saga is just that good. It's like Star
Wars for adults, if Star Wars was funnier, dirtier, and twice as wildly
creative. Trying to summarize Saga can't
possibly do it justice, so let's just say it includes tree spaceships, dismembered
ghosts, sex, bounty hunters, in-laws, a cat that knows if you're lying, a very
naked giant ogre, and much, much more. It's also entertaining as hell. Buying
both the first two volumes will only cost you $20 at the moment.